Cutting R&D to Grow GTM Spend : Is it Happening Across Software Companies?
Tomasz TunguzVenture Capitalist at Redpoint If you were forwarded this newsletter, and you'd like to receive it in the future, subscribe here. Cutting R&D to Grow GTM Spend : Is it Happening Across Software Companies?
During Office Hours with Lee Kirkpatrick, Lee recalled managing a startup through a downturn. The business cut R&D spend to conserve cash. By prioritizing sales & marketing, the company successfully lengthened runway to increase revenue, which eased the subsequent fundraising. I wondered if a similar pattern existed in the public software markets. Actually, the opposite is true: software companies spend more on R&D (research & development) & less on Sales & Marketing (S&M) as a percent of revenue today than six years ago. I suspect it’s because of PLG motions. R&D as a percent of revenue across all public software companies increased from 24% to 28% in the last six years. The trend is consistent & apparent across all quartiles. I categorized these companies by their primary motion: sales or product-led. Sales-led companies have oscillated around the 25% mark. However, PLG companies are a different story. Starting in 2017 when the data is richer, the PLG companies increased R&D spend from 27.5% to 33%. Sales & marketing costs as a percent of revenue are down across both PLG & Sales-led companies. The sales efficiencies of the second-half of Covid are apparent especially in sales-led businesses. It’s curious that sales efficiency has been declining at the same time as S&M spend as a percentage of revenue has fallen. Perhaps it implies declining growth rates across the industry, but it’s worthy of closer inspection. The last three quarters show a trend reversal to increased spending, however. There’s no doubt from this data PLG companies spend more on R&D to grow. Carilu Dietrich & I chatted about this during her office hours. Atlassian followed this model to great success inspiring an increasing number of software companies to follow suit. Because of their larger balance sheets & ability to raise capital in the public markets, public software companies spent more on R&D rather than less. |
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